Luxmama Club & ParentPrep asbl

Luxmama Club & ParentPrep asbl Birth Culture NGO humanely shaping future/new parents , mentalhealth, . Join our Next Calmbirth group: [email protected]

Luxmama Club & ParentPrep asbl is a NGO raising awareness for green, natural & holistic parenting alternatives, birth rights and perinatal mental health by offering social events and educational workshops in Luxembourg for expecting and new parents. Visit www.luxmamaclub.com for more details

18/04/2026
09/04/2026

Is the recommendation of induction for advanced maternal age truly based on sound evidence?

Or is it illogical when you break down and really look at the issues?

What do older women need to know about the evidence in this area?

We hear from more and more women who are told that they need induction of labour because they are older.

This issue also arose when the NICE guideline on induction of labour was revised in 2021.

The recommendation to offer earlier induction to older women was not included in the final guideline.

But we know it’s still being offered.

As I wrote when the guideline was published:

“One of the most controversial aspects of the draft [NICE] guideline was the proposed recommendation that earlier induction be offered to certain groups of women, including older women, larger women and women who conceived via IVF or ARTs.

It is clear that some groups of women/babies have a slightly higher chance of stillbirth compared to other groups.

But data on this are often crude, the absolute risk may not be that high and we often have no trial evidence to show whether or not induction of labour would make a difference.” (Wickham 2021).

I’ve written more about induction for advanced maternal age in two of my books.

Those are Inducing Labour: making informed decisions and In Your Own Time: how western medicine controls that start of labour and why this needs to stop.

I also have a blog post on induction for advanced maternal age.

Find it at https://www.sarawickham.com/articles-2/induction-for-advanced-maternal-age/

I hope you’ll find it useful.

If you do, you can support my work by buying my books and recommending them to others.

And by the way, there’s one thing we don’t say often enough to older women who get pregnant:

Congratulations 🥰💕😍🎉

06/04/2026
28/03/2026

Obstetrics emerged from midwifery—not the other way around.
When male physicians entered the birth space in the 18th–19th centuries, they:

Learned by observing midwives
Adopted midwifery techniques
Added surgical tools (like forceps)
Medicalized and institutionalized birth
This shift was driven by professional politics, not evidence.

23/03/2026

Among the Aka people of the Central African rainforest, fathers hold or stay within arm's reach of their infants for nearly half of every 24-hour period—around 47% of the time, the highest level of direct paternal proximity ever recorded in any human society.

This is not a modern experiment in equal parenting. It is a centuries-old way of life, documented by anthropologist Barry Hewlett who lived among the Aka for years. Infants are rarely apart from human contact; they are held, carried, soothed, and surrounded by attentive caregivers all day long. Care is not rigidly divided into “mother’s work” and “father’s work.” When mothers are away hunting or gathering, fathers step in fully—holding, feeding, comforting. Roles shift fluidly. Care flows wherever it is needed.

In some cases, Hewlett observed fathers allowing infants to suckle on their ni***es for comfort when mothers were absent. The practice is not nutritional in the way breastfeeding is, but it provides soothing and connection—skin-to-skin reassurance that calms a fussy baby when the primary caregiver is unavailable.

Just pause and take that in.

In much of the modern world, nurturing is often treated as secondary, feminine, or optional for men. Fathers are praised for “helping” rather than expected to be primary. Many babies spend significant time alone in cribs, playpens, or daycare, learning—sometimes through tears—that comfort is not always immediate. The Aka remind us of something older and perhaps wiser: human beings did not evolve in isolated nuclear households with one exhausted parent carrying the full emotional weight. We evolved in webs of touch, responsiveness, and shared responsibility.

The Aka are hunter-gatherers. Their lives are mobile and resource-limited. They have no accumulated wealth to hoard, no rigid hierarchies to defend. Kinship—brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, grandparents—is their most essential resource. Food is not stored; everyone contributes. Women and men both hunt with nets, both gather, both care for children. This egalitarianism extends to infancy. Fathers are not “babysitting.” They are parenting. When the camp is quiet, fathers hold infants for long stretches. When families are on the move, fathers carry them alongside mothers. Infants are almost never laid down unattended; they are passed from caregiver to caregiver, held skin-to-skin, soothed quickly when they cry.

The Aka are not performing a progressive social experiment. They are living a pattern many small-scale societies share: children thrive when care is abundant, flexible, and communal. Babies are not expected to cry alone and learn that no one is coming. They are answered. They are held. They are kept close.

Modern societies have drifted far from this. In many places, parents—especially mothers—are expected to meet ancient human needs inside systems never designed for them. Daycare ratios stretch caregivers thin. Work schedules pull parents away for hours. Cultural messages often frame close, responsive care as optional or even indulgent. Yet research consistently shows that infants flourish with physical contact, quick responses to distress, and multiple attentive adults. The Aka have known this for generations. They have not forgotten that the first year of life is not a time to teach independence through separation—it is a time to build security through presence.

The Aka fathers’ involvement is not perfect or universal across all forager groups, but it stands out as an extreme on a spectrum. Cross-cultural studies show hunter-gatherer fathers generally provide more direct care than fathers in farming or industrial societies. The Aka are the outlier at the high end, with fathers holding infants for hours each day in camp settings and remaining nearby even during economic activities. Their infants are held by someone—father, mother, sibling, grandparent, aunt, uncle—nearly all waking hours.

This is not romanticizing a “primitive” life. The Aka face hardship: disease, hunger, conflict. But their childcare reflects a deep cultural logic: a baby’s survival and well-being depend on being surrounded by responsive adults. That logic once shaped most human societies. It still shapes the Aka.

And perhaps most striking of all, they remind us that for the vast majority of human history, babies were not expected to cry alone and learn self-soothing. They were held. They were answered. They were kept close.

Maybe the question is not whether Aka fatherhood is extraordinary.
Maybe the question is why so much of the modern world drifted so far from what once was ordinary.

DID YOU GIVE BIRTH DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC?SHARE YOUR EXPERIENCE with the WHO!  By participating in the IMAgiNE EUR...
08/12/2020

DID YOU GIVE BIRTH DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC?
SHARE YOUR EXPERIENCE with the WHO! By participating in the IMAgiNE EURO survey, you will help to collect information and improve the quality of care for mothers and babies.
IT MATTERS!
Visit this website and fill the short, anonymous, online questionnaire available in over 20 languages.
This international project is coordinated by the WHO Collaborating Center for Maternal and Child Health, Trieste, Italy in collaboration with many partners incl the professional association of the lactation consultants of
Luxembourg (BLL).
Click here to fill in the survey:
bit.ly/ImagineEuroSurvey

"what a great model for maternity care. To focus on the wants/needs of the birthing parent. This could be the ideal way ...
26/11/2020

"what a great model for maternity care. To focus on the wants/needs of the birthing parent. This could be the ideal way to ensure all maternity policies are microbiome-friendly, and fully supportive and protective of the infant microbiome when possible."

I love this article in The Tennessean - it provides a beautiful vision of a possible future where all hospitals have midwives on their executive board, to ensure respectful maternity care for all parents.

24/11/2020

Waat häss du bei denger Gebuert gebraucht?
De quoi aurais tu eu besoin pendant la naissance de ton enfant?
What did you needed during birth?

19/11/2020

"New research from Turkey finds eating fermented foods helps prevent mastitis.
The study found lower incidence of mastitis when the breastfeeding mother ate 6 fermented foods: kefir, homemade yogurt, conventional yogurt, boza (a fermented drink made from wheat and yeast), tarhana (a grain that is mixed with yogurt or fermented milk) and pickles."

This is fascinating and really helpful for all expectant and new parents, and for all those support mothers to breastfeed.

Adresse

Walferdange

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